Ontario commits $1.3B to build, upgrade schools
The funds will go towards 30 new schools and 15 school expansions.
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Key Takeaways:
- The Ontario government is allocating $1.3 billion to build 30 new schools and expand 15 others, creating over 25,000 new student spaces and 1,600 licensed child care spaces to address critical needs in growing communities.
- The government is streamlining approval processes and working with school boards to ensure projects meet community needs, addressing demographic growth, housing developments, and access to French-language education.
- By prioritizing shovel-ready projects, the initiative aims to meet student space demands quickly while mitigating rising construction costs, as part of Ontario’s broader “Build Ontario” plan.
The Wholes Story:
The Ontario government is investing $1.3 billion to build 30 new schools and 15 school expansions across Ontario, creating more than 25,000 new student spaces and more than 1,600 new licensed child care spaces. The investments address critical needs in growing areas of the province to provide students with modern learning spaces to help them achieve success.
“This is the second consecutive year that our government has made historic investments in new school construction and school expansion, as part of the government’s Build Ontario plan,” said Jill Dunlop, Minister of Education. “Under our plan, schools are being built faster and more efficiently than ever before so more students have access to a place to learn and prepare for the jobs of tomorrow.”
The ministry says it is working closely with school boards to ensure infrastructure investments meet the needs of local communities and deliver good value for Ontario taxpayers. The increased Capital Priorities funding is intended to address growth related to demographic changes and housing development in local communities.
The 45 projects were selected after reviewing school boards’ project submissions through the 2024-25 Capital Priorities program, and address current and critical space needs in communities where alternative options are limited, as well as access to French-language education, to meet urgent needs across the province.